Blues 2019
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@taniwharugby said in Blues 2019:
although still signing kids straight out of school is still going on
All sides do
As for Dalton he almost made the opposite mistake. This was in a stuff article last week:
In 2014 Bryan Williams (now Sir Bryan) then got a phone call from Andy Dalton, then the CEO of The Blues. "He told me," says Williams, "that he was really beating himself up over whether he should sign Rieko, who was then still at Auckland Grammar. The Blues had a policy that they didn't sign schoolkids, and he was reluctant to break it. I said to Andy, 'If you don't sign him and his brother you'll be regretting it for the rest of your life. You can build a team around him and Akira. They're from great rugby people, and they'll be dedicated and loyal.'" Not every star will have the good fortune to be personally known and recommended by an icon like Williams.
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Improving 22 exits has got to be a priority next year. We need another player on the field with a big boot. Nanai has distance, and with more practice should be able to do it. Duffie has no excuses. Unfortunately Collins doesn't have much distance.
Best hope might be signing Shaun Stevenson. He did play under MacDonald and Umaga in the 2016 NZ U20 team.
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@tim Shaun Stevenson looks like the kind of rocks and diamonds player the Blues should be staying clear of to me.
I reckon the Blues should have a good look at Ross Wright as a hooker next year despite his age.
Hopefully Pulu isn't captain next year so they don't feel obligated to play him. He looked like an extra from the Walking Dead tonight.
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Apparetly the NZ sevens team was like that for a while when DJ Forbes wa captain, but they toned it down a bit. Got to have buy in from the whole squad if you are bringing in christian stuff to the team situation. I was in a club where we said a prayer before games, I was happy to go along with it, I was one of the few white boys.
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@majorrage If that's the case then it's a very minor thing to divide a whole squad.
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@african-monkey For a lot of PI players, religion is not a minor thing though.
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@stargazer Yeah I get that, I'm half Samoan and have played in a lot of teams where we said a prayer before and after games. I'm not at all religious but I went along with it and let them do their thing, no big deal at all, can't see why others can't do the same it really shouldn't be an issue.
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@african-monkey depends how much the religious crap is shoved down your face. A prayer in the pitch is one thing, but saying grace at dinner, getting preached at about your religious affiliations etc etc would piss a lot off people. Do they do Muslim stuff too, for Sonny? The blues are a work place and that sort of thing is something I would rage against
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@machpants said in Blues 2019:
@african-monkey depends how much the religious crap is shoved down your face. A prayer in the pitch is one thing, but saying grace at dinner, getting preached at about your religious affiliations etc etc would piss a lot off people. Do they do Muslim stuff too, for Sonny? The blues are a work place and that sort of thing is something I would rage against
I'd be more worried about the potential impact of religion being seen as a separate factor to personal agency. So, when you have two or three losses, mostly due to the personal decisions, many of which could be improved with greater preparation, it could be very frustrating if people explained away losses by suggesting that the current troubles were 'god's way of testing us' or 'god's plan' with the conclusion that 'we should just keep doing what we are doing'.
I'm not suggesting that is happening, but it's one thought that I could imagine happening and it could put a big gap between people who see their actions and the results they achieve as some reflection of god's will versus those who see the results they achieve as largely due to their personal agency (i.e., capability to bring about the actions required for winning rugby). Those individuals (i.e., the non-believers) may be more likely to closely examine their own - or others - preparation, whcih could lead to tension.
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I knew a guy who had the potential to go all the way, played NZ age group stuff, was big, strong, fast, but apparently found a God, and determined that until his God told him he should play rugby again, he shouldnt.
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Kiss of death:
https://www.nzherald.co.nz/sport/news/article.cfm?c_id=4&objectid=12089370
Does raise a good point about whether Coventry will want to be just an assistant though.
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As has been said many times, if Tana had any humility or class he would resign.
The fact that he took an extension at all shows he puts his personal status ahead of the team.
How can he demand more of the players when his own performance is so dire?
And he can moan about injuries all he likes, take a look at every other NZ franchise, all have been effected by injuries.
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@kirwan Tana feels like a gambler deep in a hole trying to win his way out. I also think he's got plenty of enablers around him in management and governance. In some ways being dropped would be kinder, as its hard to see him at the helm for the upswing in form/results etc. Given that still could be a few years off in terms of genuine improvement.
I know it's all hot air until we see it, but I thought the Otere Black signing was going to do a lot for the blues. Hopefully that eventuates in 2019.
But fully agree that selection and recruitment are two things that stink in terms of Tana's coaching. Maybe a case of trying every combination in terms of selection... but fuck me he keeps making some insane decisions!